‘Whether you have an academic interest in the UN Security Council, happen to be a journalist seeking reliable background information about it, or simply want to know how the Council works and why it so frequently stays short of our expectations - from now on there is no better way of finding out than reaching for this sharp, crystal-clear book written by prominent insiders.’
Bruno Simma - Former Judge at the International Court of Justice, Founding editor of the German Commentary on the UN Charter
‘This exceptionally well-organized and persuasive book by two noted legal scholars (and frequent, much sought-after, practitioners) on the UN Security Council’s powers and wider role in international law, a much contested field, will set the standard for at least the coming generation.’
David M. Malone - Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations
‘Wood and Sthoeger elegantly parse the voluminous practice of the U.N. Security Council to explain its most salient characteristics in relation to international law, notably its nature, process, power, limits, and law-making role. Through copious and compelling examples, the sometimes-obscure legal functions of this important political organ are thoughtfully revealed.’
Sean D. Murphy - Manatt/Ahn Professor of International Law, George Washington University; Member, U.N. International Law Commission
‘… [an] excellent book … The two authors of this monograph have a combination of experience of the actual operation of the Security Council that enables them to present just such a knowledgeable and realistic account of what the Security Council can and does do in practice. This is a study written out of that experience, rather than out of book-learning, and it is very much the stronger for it.’
Vaughan Lowe
Source: American Journal of International Law